In 1974,
Empresa Mexicana de Lucha Libre (EMLL, later CMLL) founder and owner
Salvador Lutteroth González brought his son into the promotion, grooming him to take over when the aging
Lutteroth, Sr. eventually had to retire. This action combined with a very rigid and conservative promotional philosophy led EMLL's promoter in
Naucalpan,
Mexico State,
Francisco Flores, EMLL wrestler and trainer
Ray Mendoza and investor Benjamin Mora, Jr. to break away from EMLL to form their own company and challenge EMLL's dominance in Mexico. With the impending change of management in EMLL many wrestlers who had previously been loyal to Lutteroth decided to leave with Flores, Mendoza and Mora including Mendoza's close friends
Rene Guajardo and
Karloff Lagarde and a number of young wrestles, frustrated with the lack of opportunities in EMLL. They formed the company
Promociones Mora y Asociados (later
Lucha Libre Internacional (LLI)), which would later become widely known as the Universal Wrestling Association (UWA), the name of its fictional governing body which was adopted from the short-lived American-based UWA promotion ran by
Lou Thesz, and held their first show on January 29, 1975, creating the first true rival for EMLL in decades. The UWA also reached out to promotions around the globe and forged working relationships with the
World Wrestling Federation (WWF) in the United States and
New Japan Pro-Wrestling (NJPW) and
Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling in Japan. This working relationship resulted in a larger influx of foreign wrestlers than EMLL was ever able to produce and also led to the UWA actually gaining exclusive rights to promote a WWF branded championship, the
WWF World Light Heavyweight Championship in the early 1980s, even if the promotion does not acknowledge this lineage in their official title history today. The UWA even began working with EMLL in the 1980s, co-promoting shows and allowing EMLL to book UWA wrestlers on their shows. By the early 1990s UWA began to struggle financially as several of their top wrestlers left the company to work for EMLL who could offer them more money. In 1992
Antonio Peña broke away from EMLL, much like the UWA had 18 years earlier, and formed a new company called
Asistencia Asesoría y Administración (AAA) further affecting the UWA's finances. As the peso devaluated sharply in the mid-1990s, the UWA was forced to close its doors in 1995. ==Legacy==